SAN FRANCISCO - Dusty Baker received a courtesy call Tuesday morning from Colorado manager Clint Hurdle, who explained why his top two players would not be in the lineup against Los Angeles. <br>
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It didn't matter. <br>
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Baker's San Francisco Giants won again, and Hurdle's depleted lineup beat the Dodgers - moving the Giants closer to clinching the NL wild card. <br>
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Barry Bonds hit his 45th homer and Benito Santiago drove in four runs as the Giants defeated the San Diego Padres 12-3 Tuesday night. <br>
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Russ Ortiz won his sixth straight start for the Giants, who have won four in a row and six of seven to move three games ahead of Los Angeles in the wild-card race. The Dodgers lost 1-0 to Colorado. <br>
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Hurdle let Baker know that Todd Helton's wife was having a baby and Larry Walker was sidelined with an eye problem. Baker appreciated not having to learn it just from the box score in his morning newspaper. <br>
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``He said he respects me and the job I do,'' Baker said. ``It was a manager-to-manager courtesy. He said, 'We're going to get after them' just the way they got after us.'' <br>
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Los Angeles has five games left and the Giants have four, plus a possible makeup game Monday in Atlanta. <br>
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Seconds after the final out in LA, the Pacific Bell Park out-of-town scoreboard was updated with an ``F'' for final score and fans started chanting ``Beat LA! Beat LA!'' just as they have been for weeks. <br>
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Bonds drove a 1-1 pitch over the wall in right field for a two-run homer in the seventh off Mike Bynum. It was the 612th career homer for Bonds, who also drew his major league-leading 64th and 65th intentional walks, giving him 193 total. <br>
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Before his team played Tuesday, Baker stressed it would take some timely hitting by Santiago in the No. 5 hole - following Jeff Kent and Bonds - for the Giants to be successful in the playoffs. <br>
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And Santiago showed just that on a misty San Francisco night, in which the moisture hovered just above the field for most of the game. <br>
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The veteran catcher was a homer shy of the cycle. He hit a two-run triple to the wall in right-center off Oliver Perez (3-5) in the three-run third. After sliding into third, he immediately hopped up and pumped his fist. <br>
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Kent drove in the first run of the inning with a bloop single to shallow right-center. After a single by Bonds, the pair moved up on a wild pitch, then scored on the hit by Santiago. <br>
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The 37-year-old Santiago also had an RBI single in the fifth and a sacrifice fly in a four-run sixth. He doubled in the seventh. <br>
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He sat out a two-game suspension last week after being accused of bumping umpire Mark Hirschbeck in a game against San Diego at Pac Bell on Sept. 15. <br>
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``I am fresh,'' said Santiago, who didn't know he was close to the cycle and says there's still time in his career to do it. ``Maybe the suspension helped me out. I'm 37 but I feel like 29.'' <br>
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Ortiz (14-10) retired the first seven batters and did not allow a hit until a fourth-inning single to Phil Nevin. <br>
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The right-hander allowed three runs and six hits in 6 2-3 innings, striking out five. He left to a standing ovation when he gave way to Scott Eyre. Ortiz waved his glove and tipped his hat to the crowd as a dollar bill reading ``In Russ We Trust'' appeared on the scoreboard. <br>
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Ortiz is one win shy of his career-best winning streak, and he could match it Sunday against Houston. <br>
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``The bottom line is just being consistent with everything,'' he said. ``Our starting pitching is pretty solid and the way the guys have been swinging the bats and playing defense, you have to feel good. We're having a lot of fun but we're still doing our jobs.'' <br>
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San Diego manager Bruce Bochy played with Santiago early on, before a car wreck derailed Santiago's career for a short time four years ago. <br>
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``He's done a great job of resurrecting his career,'' Bochy said. ``He's matured as a player and he's smarter as a catcher and hitter. I'm happy for him.'' <br>
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San Francisco's Reggie Sanders hit a solo homer with two outs in the second that went just over the outstretched glove of left fielder Ray Lankford. <br>
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The Giants' sixth inning featured a bases-loaded walk by Bynum to J.T. Snow. Bonds and Sanders, who both walked, scored on David Bell's two-run single, and Santiago had the sacrifice fly that scored Kenny Lofton. <br>
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Perez allowed four runs and six hits in four innings. <br>
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NOTES: The Giants' Tsuyoshi Shinjo led off the seventh with a single to break a four-game hitless streak. ... Bonds has walked 33 times against San Diego this season. ... San Francisco is three games behind first-place Arizona, the closest the Giants have been to the Diamondbacks in two months. ... Ortiz has a 2.34 ERA during his win streak and has a lifetime regular season record of 16-4 after August.
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